Odis Emery v. Greater Greenville Housing and Revitalization Assn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 8, 2019
Docket2016-CA-01439-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Odis Emery v. Greater Greenville Housing and Revitalization Assn (Odis Emery v. Greater Greenville Housing and Revitalization Assn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odis Emery v. Greater Greenville Housing and Revitalization Assn, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2016-CA-01439-COA

ODIS EMERY APPELLANT

v.

GREATER GREENVILLE HOUSING AND APPELLEE REVITALIZATION ASSOCIATION

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/02/2016 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MARIE WILSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WASHINGTON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DEREK D. HOPSON DEREK DEWAYNE HOPSON JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: ROBERT N. WARRINGTON ALEXANDRA HUTTON OGLESBY NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 06/12/2018 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: 06/25/2018: DENIED; REVERSED AND REMANDED - 01/08/2019 MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLTON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

MODIFIED OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

¶1. The motion for rehearing is denied. The previous opinion of this court is withdrawn

and this opinion is substituted in its place.

¶2. This case concerns a default judgment entered in a lawsuit in which Greater

Greenville Housing & Revitalization Association (“Greater Greenville”) sought to reform

a warranty deed conveying certain property to Odis Emery in 2011. Over four years after

executing and delivering the warranty deed to Emery, Greater Greenville discovered that the legal descriptions in the warranty deed contained four additional properties that Greater

Greenville claims it did not intend to convey.

¶3. After it was unable to resolve the matter with Emery, Greater Greenville filed suit,

seeking a decree reforming the warranty deed to exclude the four additional properties based

upon mutual mistake and a scrivener’s error. Emery was served with the summons and the

complaint but failed to timely file an answer. Greater Greenville obtained a default

judgment, and just over three weeks later, Emery filed his motion to set aside the default

judgment.

¶4. The chancery court denied Emery’s motion, applying the three-prong balancing test

used in assessing whether a default judgment should be set aside under Rule 55(c) and Rule

60(b) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure.1 The chancery court found that although

Greater Greenville did not show it would be prejudiced if the default judgment were set

aside, Emery had failed to show good cause for his default, and he failed to show he had a

colorable defense to Greater Greenville’s deed-reformation lawsuit.

¶5. Emery appeals, arguing that the chancery court’s refusal to set aside the default

judgment was an abuse of discretion because he had shown both good cause for his default,

and that he had a colorable defense to Greater Greenville’s lawsuit.

¶6. We find that the chancery court did not abuse its discretion in finding against Emery

on the good cause prong of the Rule 60(b) three-prong balancing test—or in finding against

Greater Greenville on the prejudice prong. We find, however, that the record shows that

1 See BB Buggies Inc. v. Leon, 150 So. 3d 90, 101 (¶23) (Miss. 2014).

2 Emery demonstrated he had a colorable defense to Greater Greenville’s lawsuit and that the

chancery court’s determination that he did not have a colorable defense was based on an error

of law. Accordingly, based on the record and the applicable law, we hold that the default

judgment against Emery should be set aside under the Rule 60(b) three-prong balancing test.

Therefore, we reverse the chancery court’s judgment and remand this case for further

proceedings.

FACTS

¶7. Greater Greenville is a Mississippi non-profit corporation located in Greenville,

Mississippi. Odis Emery lives in Hollandale, Mississippi. On March 2, 2011, Emery and

Greater Greenville executed an option to purchase certain properties. Fredrick Spencer was

the Executive Director of Greater Greenville at that time and executed the option to purchase

on Greater Greenville’s behalf. The option provided as follows:

OPTION TO PURCHASE

Greater Greenville Housing & Revitalization Association Inc. has agreed to s[ell] the following properties to Odis Emery of 609 Taft Street, Hollandale, MS 38748 for $75,000.00:

• 510 Wright Street Greenville, MS • 544 S. Hinds Street Greenville, MS • 405 A & B North Street Greenville, MS • 464 Hughes Street Greenville, MS • 415 Slaughter Street Greenville, MS • 417 Slaughter Street Greenville, MS

This offer is contingent upon the buyer approval for financing.

¶8. The option contains no recital that Emery paid any consideration for it, and there is

no evidence in the record that Emery did so. The option also does not contain a time frame

3 within which Emery must exercise the option upon meeting the financing contingency.

¶9. According to Emery, and as supported by Spencer’s affidavit, Emery and Spencer, as

the agent for Greater Greenville, viewed the original six properties and then agreed to include

four additional properties in the sale. As set forth in the Spencer affidavit, the reason for

including the four additional properties was to assist Emery with the loan he had taken out

to purchase the property2—and to address the pressure that the City of Greenville was putting

on Greater Greenville to revitalize the subject properties, including the four additional

properties. These four additional properties included the homes and surrounding property

located at the following addresses:

• 542 South Hinds Street Greenville, MS • 509 Roach Street Greenville, MS • 511 Roach Street Greenville, MS • 427 Wright Street Greenville, MS

¶10. On April 18, 2011, Emery paid Greater Greenville $75,000.00, and Greater Greenville

executed and delivered a warranty deed conveying certain real property to Emery. The legal

property descriptions in the warranty deed contained all ten properties, the original six

properties listed in the option, and the four additional properties listed above, which were

described by lot and block designations and metes and bounds descriptions. Additionally,

the legal descriptions for the properties located at “464 Hughes Street” and “415-417

Slaughter Lane” are labeled in the deed; there are notations in the margin for properties on

“Wright Street,” “S. Hinds,” and “North Street,” but they contain no specific street-number

2 Although the record does not contain documentary evidence that Emery obtained financing, he asserts in his Appellant’s Brief that he did so, and this fact is not disputed.

4 references. There were no notations or labels in the warranty deed regarding the legal

description encompassing the Roach Street properties.3

¶11. Over four years after conveying the property to Emery, Greater Greenville discovered

the discrepancy between the home addresses listed in the option to purchase and the warranty

deed’s legal descriptions, which included the original six properties listed in the option and

the four additional properties. By a letter dated December 23, 2015, Greater Greenville

attempted to resolve what it believed to be a scrivener’s error in the deed’s legal descriptions

by contacting Emery and the attorney who represented him at that time, Willie Bailey. In that

letter, Greater Greenville set out what it believed were the facts and issues relating to the

deed’s legal descriptions and detailed an offer to resolve the matter without the necessity of

litigation.

¶12. The record contains the affidavit of Willie Bailey, in which he said that he withdrew

from representing Emery on or about December 23, 2015, but before that time he had

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